In an
interview with Wired, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak makes
the seemingly counterintuitive case for Apple to design an
Android phone.

(Wozniak is an Apple co-founder alongside Steve Jobs and the
often-forgotten Ron Wayne, but it bears mentioning that he has
nothing to do with the company's day-to-day operations.)

"There’s nothing that would keep Apple out of the Android market
as a secondary phone market," he told
Wired. "We could compete very well. People like the precious
looks of stylings and manufacturing that we do in our product
compared to the other Android offerings. We could play in two
arenas at the same time."

There's nothing legally preventing Apple from creating a
phone designed to run Android software. It's an open-source
platform available to anyone who wants it. But given the nonstop
vitriol between iOS and Android figureheads, inroads of that
level seem downright improbable.

We imagine Apple would prefer to keep innovating on its
existing product line.